Pieter12
Member
In my brother's case, it is an individual house in a moderately dense suburban neighborhood.The U.S post office does the same thing, new town homes, condo, apartments have clusters of boxes.
In my brother's case, it is an individual house in a moderately dense suburban neighborhood.The U.S post office does the same thing, new town homes, condo, apartments have clusters of boxes.
The U.S post office does the same thing, new town homes, condo, apartments have clusters of boxes.
There has been ongoing talks to privatize the U.S mail and let market forces dictate price. We pay about 1/3 of our bills by mail, but could pay most if not all by electronic transfer. Other option under consideration would be mail delivery 3 times week rather than 6, but states with large rural populations depend on the mail. That may change as 5G internet services is becoming more reliable and at a price that is less than most fiber optic internet. The U.S post makes money with bulk mail and package delivery, loses money on flat mail.
I pay my bills for the most part by check. That cuts down on the ability of others to hack my accounts.
There was a case not long ago in the Los Angeles area of thieves targeting post offices, making off with checks that they manually altered and cashed. So much for avoiding hacking by writing checks and mailing them.
I don't think I've paid for checks since the original two boxes I got when I opened my first checking account, long time a go when I was 18 y.o. I've always just ordered the standard, boring, plain blue or tan checks and they come in the mail for free. Maybe had to pay postage here and there.
I don't know of a Canadian financial institution that still offers free personal cheques. Possibly there are high service charge accounts that do, but I'd be surprised.
Given that our new government is seeking to privatize every possible aspect, I see Amazon mail or prime mail if you want free (with commercials) delivery with a yearly membership.
The U.S post office does the same thing, new town homes, condo, apartments have clusters of boxes.
There was a case not long ago in the Los Angeles area of thieves targeting post offices, making off with checks that they manually altered and cashed. So much for avoiding hacking by writing checks and mailing them.
I don't know of a Canadian financial institution that still offers free personal cheques. Possibly there are high service charge accounts that do, but I'd be surprised.
And none of the financial institutions actually transfer physical cheques any more, save some very expensive special purpose exceptions. Cheques are now scanned when deposited, the originals destroyed, and the scanned images are what go back and forth.
As most people don't deposit cheques physically any more - they scan them using their cel phone banking apps - financial institutions are more likely to insist on longer hold times and/or charge handling fees.
The digital imaging of cheques means that they are at least as vulnerable to scams as digital payment systems - probably more so - given the personal details and signatures and banking information on them.
All of which is relevant to the original thread subject, in as much as being another example of how the physical delivery of documents is much less common or necessary that when the postal service focused on home delivery.
The postal disruption in Canada last year meant that for the first time since my wife and I became a couple - a few decades ago - we didn't mail Christmas cards. We delivered some directly to those we met up with. In the last few years, the number of cards we have received has dwindled from dozens to hardly any.
Most of the big banks here waive most or all fees if you have payroll auto-deposit or a mortgage with the same bank or have a shit ton of money on deposit with the institution.
I would think that by instructing your bank to transfer funds to pay your bills would be relatively safe, other than giving your bank information to the various companies you need to pay. If any one of those companies gets hacked and your bank information is taken, the doors are wide open. If the bank gets hacked you're in deep shit, but the bank should be responsible for that.Several years ago by my girlfriend and I had California DMV stickers stolen from the same post office building. Less can be stolen through checks than if I were hacked through any of the internet or electronic systems. I am minimizing my target areas.
I would think that by instructing your bank to transfer funds to pay your bills would be relatively safe, other than giving your bank information to the various companies you need to pay. If any one of those companies gets hacked and your bank information is taken, the doors are wide open. If the bank gets hacked you're in deep shit, but the bank should be responsible for that.
Just checked...my bank a major one in US... $27 for 50 checks. Independent check ordering services less than half that...why the guy at the bank told my wife to get them at Costco!
I talk to my letter carrier frequently and he loves his job and thanks the “junk mail” senders because without them he’d be unnecessary. During the holidays he delivered, on his route alone, between 200-300 parcels per day. The USPS struggles and seems oriented toward parcel delivery as a way to subsidize letter mail. Much in the way that “phone companies” subsidize Plain Old Telephone Service (copper land lines). But without a government mandate for both letter delivery and POTS for those unable to use modern alternatives it seems quite possible that those services would be terminated.
Perhaps the postcard/print exchange will need to evolve to a larger format, or transition from A to D.
“Something’s gotta give”.![]()
Catalog mailers still exist in droves for certain communities, it seems. My elderly parent received a ton of catalogues… literally a ton. Last year I had to move her to assisted living and thought that forwarding her mail to my home was a good idea. Only first class mail is forwarded. The government agencies were automatically informed of the address change but I had to change address for banks and merchants. Then the flood of catalogs resumed, but now they clutter my mailbox and trash can. Somehow, these catalogue-based vendors who prey on/support elderly people get automagically informed of address changes.
I pay my bills for the most part by check. That cuts down on the ability of others to hack my accounts.
I guess you could use a Sharpie.I use Uniball Signo 207 ballpoint pens when writing checks . They're recommended as their ink is very difficult to bleach out of the check and the details changed to pay a thief who stole your check from your mailbox, if that;s where you mail from, or from other places. Apparently, there are ways to bleach out ink from less secure pen types.
it's apparently quite common - to the point that I get repeatedly told by the bank to NOT send checks in the mail.
Leading to a bounty for theives, who rob postmen of their master keys that open the whole blank of mailboxes, so they can steal mail from dozens of addresses with one easy open and later tamper with checks.
Our eldest daughter lives in such a complex of townhomes, and their collective mailboxes have been robbed on multiple occasions. It would be so much less tamper-prone if each resident's had a mail slot!
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